Clutch Cable Issues? Help

sgaustin83

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Sep 21, 2014
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I was driving my 65 mustang today that has a 5speed, when i went to push the clutch in something snapped and the clutch went to the floor. I believe the clutch cable snapped, i traced the cable attached to the clutch and a 4-5" section of cable came out snapped. Im new to the old cars and still trying to learn, i believe it does have a stage two clutch to support the 302. The clutch was very hard to press and assumed it still needed to be broken in, was the clutch cable over tightened, or what could be the possible issue? Thanks
 
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I don't think anything went wrong except the cable was just tired. What I'm wondering about is the set up. Is this a Tremek or TKO out of a fox body car? Just make sure your cable is running in smoothe curves. To say; make sure your cable isn't routed where there's agressive bends or curves. All the cable routing should be subtle and gradual.
 
What would make it hard to press the clutch? The cable looks like its ran without any drastic bends or curves. It broke about 5 inches down the line from the clutch pedal. Thanks
 
In my I intial post I said I traced it to the clutch. I meant to the clutch pedal. When I pulled on the cable attached to the pedal 4-5" came out. I sure it's a stage two, the cable doesn't look like its wrapped around anything or have kinks. Is it possible it was just over tightened? Thanks for all the help
 
No dumbness around here. I'm just surprised that your clutch pedal is so tough that it's uncomfortable to drive. Especially with a 302. The actual clutch isn't going to have anything to do with what you're feeling at the pedal. It's the pressure plate you're feeling. Unless you're engine is built to the hilt...say a stroker at 347+ CI...you honestly don't need anything more than a stock clutch and pressure plate. Do you know what pressure plate was installed?
 
If the cable isn't heat shielded, then the nylon coating inside will melt. When the car cools down the melted nylon will cool and harden to the cable. At initial startup the clutch pedal will be very stiff because the hardened nylon on the cable. If you pulled on the cable under the dash and 4-5" came out under the dash then the cable is probably broken. If it has that much slach and it isn't broken then the housing casing probably mented too. The wire hoinsing i basically a spring with a plactic sheath over it. When the sheath melts, there isn't anything to keep the spring compressed. When you step on the pedal the housing coil bulges or colapses on it self like a Chinese finger trap. This will allow the pedal to work fine but the clutck fork doesn't move.
 
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So do you think just replacing the cable will fix this, hard to guess I'm sure? Or is the pressure plate and clutch to strong and need to be swapped out? I ordered a new clutch cable and will buy heat shielding to go around the clutch cable any place you recommend buying be shielding? Thanks
 
Pretty funny (OP) - my clutch cable snapped almost exactly one month to the day after. I have a '65 fastback with a crate 306, T5' and Centerforce dual friction pressure plate (this is the way it was set up when I bought it)...total pain in the ass in stop and go traffic. Mine was doing the same thing, very stiff in the clutch.
Anyway, I replaced it with the Modern Driveline clutch cable. (That's a who other story of whoa and misery). End result, drives great...on a drag strip.
 
I'm also running a king cobra clutch from modern driveline, but I went with a new reinforced Z bar setup for my conversion, it works great, and itll never break. If your cables keep giving you issues I would look into the Z bar.
 
If I end up being over what the clutch can handle I'll just have to go easy on the clutch till I can afford a stiffer one. It would only really be an issue if I have sticky tires and rail on it a lot in the lower gears.